首页   按字顺浏览 期刊浏览 卷期浏览 Bird Populations in Successional Forests of Mountain AshEucalyptus Regnansin Central Vi...
Bird Populations in Successional Forests of Mountain AshEucalyptus Regnansin Central Victoria

 

作者: LoynRichard H.,  

 

期刊: Emu - Austral Ornithology  (Taylor Available online 1985)
卷期: Volume 85, issue 4  

页码: 213-230

 

ISSN:0158-4197

 

年代: 1985

 

DOI:10.1071/MU9850213

 

出版商: Taylor&Francis

 

数据来源: Taylor

 

摘要:

SUMMARYLoyn, R.H. 1985. Bird populations in successional forests of Mountain AshEucalyptus regnansin central Victoria. Emu 85: 213–230.Bird populations were estimated from 1977 to 1979 by mapping territories and by an“area search”method in stands of differing age (regenerating after wildfire or harvesting eucalypts) in the Victorian Central Highlands mainly near Toolangi. The aims were to assess effects of harvesting (followed by burning and artificial regeneration) and provide data on populations and ecology of birds inhabiting this distinctive forest type. Mountain Ash forests grow in high rainfall areas and the trees can reach heights of 100 m; they usually grow as even-aged stands and 79% of Mountain Ash forests in the Central Highlands has regenerated after severe fires in 1939.About 65 species of birds were found to be regular inhabitants of Mountain Ash forests and associated plant communities. All except the Pink Robin breed also in foothill gullies. Several species that are common in drier foothill forests, were absent from Mountain Ash forests. The commonest species were those that feed in the dense shrub layer or from damp ground below. Some insectivorous birds that were abundant in summer (e.g. Golden WhistlerPachycephala pectoralis, Grey FantailRhipidura fuliginosa)left Mountain Ash forests for the winter. Winter food sources were limited and the most important were blossoms of Mountain CorreaCorrea lawrenciana, invertebrates in damp leaf litter, and invertebrates or carbohydrate exudates from hanging bark of Mountain Ash or branches and trunks of Silver WattleAcacia dealbata.Habitats and interactions between various bird species are described.Bird population densities were low in the first three years after harvesting but some species were confined to open stands of this age. Other forest birds returned rapidly as eucalypts and understorey species regenerated. Populations were as high in 39-year-old regrowth as in older stands though some species (mainly those that need tree hollows for nesting) were more common in older forest. Implications for management are discussed.

 

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